Karapanos v. Pappas

28 Mass. L. Rptr. 527
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 29, 2011
DocketNo. WOCV201000333C
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 527 (Karapanos v. Pappas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karapanos v. Pappas, 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 527 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Curran, Dennis J., J.

Introduction

The defendant Barbara Pappas has filed a motion for sanctions and the defendant Gerald Turner has filed a motion for attorneys fees and costs under G.L.c. 231, §6F and Mass.R.Civ.P. 11. Both motions are ALLOWED and as statutorily required, the Court issues the following Findings of Fact.

FINDINGS OF FACT

This is a case about greed.

Eva Pappas is 91 years of age and lives in her own home with an aide. After the death of her husband some years ago, her principal source of support (aside from a social security check), was a monthly rent check from Hillside Corporation, a company her husband had owned. Hillside owned a commercial property in Webster, Massachusetts and leased its premises to a Rite-Aid Pharmacy which paid monthly rent. Eva Pappas survived on those monthly checks.

Mrs. Pappas has an adult granddaughter, Cynthia Karapanos. After the death of her grandfather, Cynthia convinced her grandmother to transfer her home to her, but Eva did maintain a life estate.

On October 1, 2008, Cynthia took her elderly grandmother to a lawyer. Eva Pappas had not asked for the meeting with this attorney and had never before met him. Thinking Cynthia was acting in her best interest, Eva did as her granddaughter directed and signed a host of legal documents, none of which she had ever requested or ever before seen. One such document immediately relinquished her ownership in the Webster real estate, transferring it all to Cynthia; a second was her resignation as Trustee of the Eva S. Pappas Revocable Trust; and a third was General Power of Attorney. The Resignation appointed Cynthia as Successor Trustee, and the Power-of-Attorney named the granddaughter as Eva’s Attomey-in-Fact.

The effect of these documents was to immediately transfer ownership in the Hillside Corporation to Cynthia. It also put an immediate end to the monthly income upon which Eva was dependent. Mrs. Pappas had never intended to transfer ownership of the Hillside Corporation to her granddaughter during her lifetime.1 She also obviously never intended to end her only source of significant monthly income. Nevertheless, the attorney to whom Cynthia Karapanos had directed her grandmother, and the legal documents she signed on October 1,2008, accomplished precisely those aims.

The First (Or Prior) Action

On July 20, 2009, Eva Pappas sued her granddaughter for breach of fiduciary duty and negligence in Eva Pappas v. Cynthia Karapanos, Worcester Superior Court Docket No. 09-CV-1648. A month later, Pappas’ counsel filed a motion for a speedy trial due to her advanced age. That motion was allowed by a prior session judge and trial was scheduled for several months later, on January 29,2010. Shortly before that date, the Court became aware that original counsel was withdrawing, to be- replaced by two attorneys, Stephen J. Kuzma and India L. Minchoff. Given the frailty of the 91-year-old plaintiff and the legislative mandate of a speedy trial, the trial went forward as scheduled on January 29, 2010. A jury was selected, but instructed to return in three weeks due to an announced and planned intervening unavailability of the judge.

However, during this hiatus, Cynthia Karapanos, acting through her new attorneys, filed another civil action in this Court, against her own mother and attorney Gerald Turner. This new Complaint contained twelve counts;

Count I—Breach of Fiduciary Relationship against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count II—Breach of Confidential Relationship against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count III—Misrepresentation against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

[528]*528Count IV—Deceit against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count V—Conversion against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count VI—Fraud against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count VII—Tortious Interference with Advantageous Relations against Defendant Barbara Pappas;

Count VIII—Undue Influence against Barbara Pappas;

Count IX—Declaratoiy Judgment against Gerald Turner;

Count X—Emotional Distress against Barbara Pappas;

Count XI—Interference with Expectancy against Barbara Pappas; and

Count XII—Injunctive Relief.
The complaint also claimed that:
Through coercion, fraud, and undue influence [the defendant Pappas] has, among other wrongdoing, caused Eva to serve as [the pflaintiff in a Complaint filed against [Karapanos] in the action styled as Eva Pappas v. Cynthia Karapanos, Docket No. 0901648.

The day before the trial was to resume in the first (or Prior) Action, the defendant Karapanos filed a motion to consolidate both actions. In denying this motion, the Court observed:

After hearing and argument, DENIED. This is a classic example of a lawsuit involving many of the same issues as a pending prior action . . . The “new,” or second, lawsuit was filed on February 10, 2010, two weeks after this action was called for trial and a jury had been impaneled. For reasons that are unclear, in the intervening three-week period before the trial commenced (due to the trial judge’s unavailability due to knee surgery), the defendants filed a second lawsuit.

On the same day, the defendant Karapanos filed a second motion, this one to continue that trial, complaining that she had not yet deposed two witnesses, Sam Pappas and Attorney Gerald Turner. However, over four months earlier, Karapanos had identified those same individuals on her witness list in the Joint Pre-Trial Memorandum (see paper 14, pp. 6 and 7) and Attorney Turner had been deposed, but had invoked his attorney-client privilege as to questions relating to his representation of Eva Pappas. The Court agreed to permit both parties to depose these and other lay and expert witnesses as necessary, exhorted them to work out any scheduling issues, but refused to delay the trial. (See paper No. 29, dated February 22, 2011, reflecting the Court’s earlier bench ruling.)

The new attorneys’ tactics in filing the second civil action, in moving to consolidate, and moving to continue the trial, were all intended to derail the imminent lawsuit against Cynthia Karapanos by:

1. confusing the triable issues in asserting twelve (12) new counts;
2. delaying the trial for this 91-year-old plaintiff; and
3. transparently hoping that death or illness would intervene and thereby eliminate Eva Pappas’ ability and/or capacity to prosecute her case.

Cynthia Karapanos’ stratagem would not succeed. In her later-filed lawsuit, she baldly asserted she was acting as Eva Pappas’ Attorney-in-Fact, when, in the prior action, she was alleged to have breached her duty created by that same trust relationship. Her (and counsel’s) cynicism is further exposed when the facts of the cases are examined. Such analysis compels the conclusion that sanctions are appropriate here for six reasons.

First, all of the claims presented in the second lawsuit were precluded by the pendency of the Prior Action. “(A]ll issues raised in th[is lawsuit] are or could [have been] raised in [the Prior Action] either as an affirmative claim or as a defense.” Clark v. Leasecomm, 2000 WL 1512373*5 (Ma.Super. 2006) [12 Mass. L.

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Related

Conant v. Kantrovitz
563 N.E.2d 247 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1990)
Clark v. Leasecomm Corp.
12 Mass. L. Rptr. 267 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Mass. L. Rptr. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karapanos-v-pappas-masssuperct-2011.